International Law, Power, Security and Justice: Essays on International Law and Relations
By (Author) Serge Sur
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
5th October 2010
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
341
Paperback
517
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 26mm
These collected essays deal with the evolutions and immutabilities of international society and international law during the last 25 years, a period during which these fields of study have undergone many changes. The starting point is that far from operating at different levels or being in conflict, international law and politics are closely intertwined. The book addresses the many different aspects of international law: the role and concept of the State, and the position of States in the international system; the bases, principles and evolution of public international law; questions of international security that still govern international relations; classic and current systems of peace and security maintenance; the standing, role and actions of the UN Security Council; arms control and limitation of armaments; unilateral uses of armed force and the legality of war; and humanitarian law and international criminal justice. The perspective of these essays is not a theoretical or dogmatic vision of international law and politics; rather they are based upon the practices of States in the international arena, and the ways in which the guiding legal rules are elaborated and implemented. These texts have been selected from Professor Sur's various books and numerous articles on international law and relations.
La justesse de la selection et la prsentation de l'ouvrage qui reflte le cheminement intellectual de l'auteur servet assurment l'ambition de la collection. * Annuaire Franais de Droit International, Volume 56 *
The three books under review offer excellent examples of legal positivism at its best and provide windows into the French ways of thinking about matters that are central to international law They are all well worth reading to understand what the modern positivist method is, to evaluate its usefulness to the international lawyer, and to gain a better understanding of French perspectives on international law. (Review of 3 titles in the French Studies in International Law Series: International Law, Power, Security and Justice by Serge Sur, The Advancement of International Law by Charles Leben, The Law Against War by Olivier Corten). -- Martin A. Rogoff * American Journal of International Law, Vol 105, 2011 *
Serge Sur is Professor of International law and relations at the University Pantheon-Assas. He directs the Centre Thucydide - Analyse et recherche en relations internationales and the Annuaire Francais de Relations Internationales (AFRI, since 2000). He has been Deputy Director of UNIDIR at Geneva (United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research) for ten years and is currently ad hoc judge at the International Court of Justice in The Hague.